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regional accents

Fun Facts About English #92 – English Rhoticity

01/28/2021 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing rhoticity

Rhoticity in English is the pronunciation of the rhotic consonant /r/ by speakers of certain varieties of English. For example, in isolation, a rhotic English speaker pronounces the words hard and butter as /ˈhɑːrd/ and /ˈbʌtər/, whereas a non-rhotic speaker “drops” the /r/ sound, pronouncing them as /ˈhɑːd/ and /ˈbʌtə/.

English dialects that use a hard /r/ include South West England, Scotland, Ireland, and most of the United States and Canada. Non-rhotic dialects are found in England, Wales, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. In the U.S., non-rhotic varieties depend on an array of factors such as region, age, social class, ethnicity, or the degree of formality when speaking.

In England, the loss of the hard /r/ began sporadically during the mid-15th century. By the mid-18th century, though /r/ was still pronounced in most environments, it was frequently dropped. By the early 19th century, the southern British standard was fully transformed into a non-rhotic variety. Colonization of countries like Australia and South Africa happened after England had become more fully non-rhotic.

In the British Council clip below, Shakespearean actor, Ben Crystal, presents two readings from the opening monologue of Romeo and Juliet – one in the accent of contemporary British English (Received Pronunciation), and the other in a simulated accent of Shakespeare’s day; the same accent that began arriving on North American shores in the early 1600s. Take special note of the hard /r/ in the latter. The comparisons begin around 1:40 in the six-minute clip.

During America’s early history as a nation, the loss of rhotic /r/ in British English influenced eastern and southern American port cities that still held close connections to England after the Revolutionary War. This caused America’s more established, upper-class pronunciation to become non-rhotic while the westward-expanding U.S. remained rhotic. Non-rhotic varieties are most apparent in the Boston, Rhode Island, and New York accents, as well as the southern accents of the Carolinas, Georgia, and Louisiana.

American non-rhotic varieties shouldn’t be mistaken for an accent known as the Trans-Atlantic or Mid-Atlantic accent; a largely cultivated manner of speaking most noticeable in Hollywood films during the 1930s and 40s. When one listens to the speech patterns of America’s old East Coast moneyed class – Franklin Delano Roosevelt, William F. Buckley, and Katharine Hepburn – it doesn’t sound like a typical American accent, but it’s not really British either. That’s because it’s fake. The “accent” or “diction” was taught in elite boarding schools and acting studios to affect a mix of American and non-rhotic British pronunciation. The result was a posh-sounding American accent no one naturally used unless “educated.”

After the Civil War, centers of wealth and political power shifted with fewer cultural connections to the old colonial and British elites. This included a cultural movement toward rhotic speech that accelerated after WWII. In the world of entertainment, the Trans-Atlantic accent fell out of popularity and film actors like Katharine Hepburn mysteriously lost their upper-class accents mid-career. This was also reflected in the national standard of radio and television where popular TV hosts like Johnny Carson hailed from the Midwest. In the eastern United States, the accent trend is reversing where rhoticism has re-asserted itself resulting in the cultural loss of distinctive accents familiar to many older Americans.

If you enjoyed this post, you might be interested in learning why Americans say /zee/ instead of /zed/ for the letter Z, how rebracketing changes a word’s pronunciation, or the history of Johnson’s Dictionary published in 1755.

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Trends: Business and Culture Reports, Books 1 & 2, bring you sixty topical Business Reports that will entertain, inform, and prompt your adult intermediate and advanced students toward lively discussions. Utilizing charts, graphs, puzzles, surveys, discussion activities, and more, these Business Reports invite students to explore and compare cultural, business, and language matters.

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: American English, Australian English, British English, English pronunciation, historical linguistics, kinney brothers publishing, language evolution, New Zealand English, non-rhotic dialects, phonetics, Received Pronunciation, regional accents, rhotic consonant, rhoticity, Scottish English

Fun Facts About English #14 – American Dialects

07/18/2019 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing Fun Facts About English 14

Historical and present linguistic evidence does not support the notion of there being one single “mainstream” American accent. The sound of American English continues to evolve, with some local accents disappearing, but several larger regional accents having emerged in the 20th century.

Social scientists estimate the number of U.S. dialects range from a basic three – New England, Southern, and Western/General America – to 24 or more. Some researchers suggest it’s impossible to count the number of dialects in the United States because, under a loose definition of the term, thousands of cities, towns, and groups have their own varieties or dialects.

US Map of Dialects

Discrete boundaries between dialects are often difficult to determine since dialects share many features with one another. Speakers use different language forms – or identical forms in different ways – based not only on where they live but also on such factors as their social class, ethnicity, and gender.

Here are three myths about dialects.

  • MYTH: A dialect is something that SOMEONE ELSE speaks.
  • REALITY: Everyone who speaks a language speaks some dialect of the language; it is not possible to speak a language without speaking a dialect of the language.
  • MYTH: Dialects result from unsuccessful attempts to speak the “correct” form of a language.
  • REALITY: Dialect speakers acquire their language by adopting the speech features of those around them, not by failing in their attempts to adopt standard language features.
  • MYTH: Dialects inherently carry negative connotations.
  • REALITY: Dialects are not necessarily positively or negatively valued; their social values are derived strictly from the social position of their community of speakers.

Take pleasure in the differences and marvel at the varied influences that make American English so dynamic. Listen to the people at work, in your neighborhood, or in social groups. Do you, as a group, use unique words or have a distinctive manner of speaking? Do you individually use language that sets you apart from those around you? Is there a region of the U.S. where you feel ‘home’ in your language? As Americans become increasingly mobile, often moving to different parts of the country over a lifetime, we never stop participating in the ever-evolving language around us.

You might also be interested in reading about English as the official language in the sea and air, why the U.S.A. doesn’t have an official language, or learn more about the history of the English language!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

Check out all the full textbook downloads in Donald’s English Classroom. From pre-k through adult, Kinney Brothers Publishing has learning materials that will bring your English language classes to life!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: accents, American English, cultural diversity, dialects, Donald's English Classroom, geographic influences, kinney brothers publishing, language evolution, language perception, language variation, linguistic diversity, linguistic identity, myths about dialects, regional accents, social factors

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